The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Sudan protest calls for military coup as political crisis deepens

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KHARTOUM — Thousands of demonstrat­ors gathered in front of the presidenti­al palace in Khartoum yesterday calling for the military to seize power as Sudan grapples with the biggest political crisis in its two-year-old transition.

The military and civilian groups have been sharing power in the east African country in an uneasy alliance since the toppling of longstandi­ng President Omar al-Bashir in 2019.

But following a failed coup attempt in September attributed to forces loyal to Bashir, military leaders have been demanding reforms to the Forces of Freedom and Change (FFC) coalition and the replacemen­t of the cabinet.

Civilian leaders, however, have accused them of aiming for a power grab.

A military-aligned faction of the FFC, including armed groups that rebelled against Bashir, called for yesterday’s protests and held a short event in a nearby convention hall.

The protesters chanted “down with the hunger government” and called for General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, head of the armed forces and Sudan’s joint military-civilian Sovereign Council, to initiate a coup and overthrow the government.

Unlike previous demonstrat­ions, protesters were able to reach the gates of the presidenti­al palace which is typically barricaded. There was little police presence at the protest.

The demonstrat­ors, who were seen arriving in central Khartoum on dozens of buses, clashed with pro-civilian protesters.

Earlier, members of an unidentifi­ed armed group removed security barriers around government buildings and prevented the police and security forces from preparing for the march, Khartoum State governor Ayman Khalid said in a statement.

In a speech on Friday here, civilian Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok presented a roadmap out of the crisis and warned that failure to find a resolution would throw the country’s future “to the wind”.

At the root of the crisis are disputes on issues of justice, military restructur­ing, and the dismantlin­g of the financial apparatus of Bashir’s regime, analysts say here.

Pro-civilian groups have called for protests on Thursday.

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